such that no term can be represented as a sum of any subset of the preceding elements of the sequence.
This differs from a sum-free set, where only pairs of sums must be avoided, but where those sums may come from the whole set rather than just the preceding terms.
form a sum-free sequence: each term in the sequence is one more than the sum of all preceding terms, and so cannot be represented as a sum of preceding terms.
If denotes the maximum sum of reciprocals of a sum-free sequence, then through subsequent research it is known that .[2]
Density
It follows from the fact that sum-free sequences are small that they have zero Schnirelmann density; that is, if is defined to be the number of sequence elements that are less than or equal to , then . Erdős (1962) showed that for every sum-free sequence there exists an unbounded sequence of numbers for which where is the golden ratio, and he exhibited a sum-free sequence for which, for all values of , ,[1] subsequently improved to by Deshouillers, Erdős and Melfi in 1999[3] and to by Luczak and Schoen in 2000, who also proved that the exponent 1/2 cannot be further improved.[4]
Levine, Eugene; O'Sullivan, Joseph (1977), "An upper estimate for the reciprocal sum of a sum-free sequence", Acta Arithmetica, 34 (1): 9–24, doi:10.4064/aa-34-1-9-24, MR0466016.
Luczak, Tomasz; Schoen, Tomasz (2000), "On the maximal density of sum-free sets", Acta Arithmetica, 95 (3): 225–229, doi:10.4064/aa-95-3-225-229, MR1793162.
Yang, Shi Chun (2009), "Note on the reciprocal sum of a sum-free sequence", Journal of Mathematical Research and Exposition, 29 (4): 753–755, MR2549677.
Yang, Shi Chun (2015), "An upper bound for Erdös reciprocal sum of the sum-free sequence", Scientia Sinica Mathematica, 45 (3): 213–232, doi:10.1360/N012014-00121.